It is safe to say that
one thing you'll do today is eat some food -- food is pretty
important to all animals. If you don't eat, it can cause all
sorts of problems: hunger, weakness, starvation... Food is
essential to life.
But what is food? What's in food that makes it so
important? What happens to the food once you eat it? What is
food made of? How does it fuel our bodies? What do words like
"carbohydrates" and "fats" really mean (especially on those
"Nutrition Facts" labels you find on almost everything these
days)? What would happen if you ate nothing but marshmallows
for a week? What is a calorie? Why can't we eat grass like a
cow does, or wood like a termite?
If you have ever wondered about food
and how your body uses it, then read on. In this edition ofHowStuffWorks,
we'll give you all of the information you need to understand
what a hamburger or a banana does to keep your body running
every day!
The Basics of Food
Think about some of the
things you have eaten today -- maybe cereal, bread,
milk, juice, ham, cheese, an apple, potatoes... All of these
foods (and pretty much any other food that you can think of)
contain seven basic components:
- Carbohydrates (simple and complex)
- Proteins
- Fats
- Vitamins
- Minerals
- Fiber
- Water
Your body's goal is to
digest food and use it to keep your body alive. In the
following sections, we will look at each of these basic
components to understand what they really do and why they are
so important to your body.
(Note that there might be a few
non-food things mixed in with what you eat, especially if you
are eating lots of processed foods. Things like artificial
colors and chemical preservatives
are the most common. Those are additives, not part of
the natural foods.)
Carbohydrates
You have probably heard of
"carbohydrates" and "complex carbohydrates." Carbohydrates
provide your body with its basic fuel. Your body thinks about
carbohydrates like a car engine
thinks about gasoline.
The simplest carbohydrate is glucose. Glucose, also called "blood
sugar" and "dextrose," flows in the bloodstream so that it is
available to every cell in your
body. Your cells absorb glucose and convert it into energy to
drive the cell. Specifically, a set of chemical reactions on
glucose creates ATP (adenosine triphosphate), and a
phosphate bond in ATP powers most of the machinery in any
human cell. If you drink a solution of water and glucose, the
glucose passes directly from your digestive system into the
bloodstream.
The word "carbohydrate" comes from the fact that glucose is
made up of carbon and water. The chemical formula for glucose
is:
C6H12O6
You can see that glucose is made of six carbon atoms
(carbo...) and the elements of six water molecules
(...hydrate). Glucose is a simple sugar, meaning that
to our tongues it tastes sweet. There are other simple sugars
that you have probably heard of. Fructose is the main sugar in
fruits. Fructose has the same chemical formula as glucose
(C6H12O6), but the atoms are
arranged slightly differently. The liver converts fructose to
glucose. Sucrose, also known as "white sugar" or "table
sugar," is made of one glucose and one fructose molecule
bonded together. Lactose (the sugar found in milk) is made of
one glucose and one galactose molecule bonded together.
Galactose, like fructose, has the same chemical components as
glucose but the atoms are arranged differently. The liver also
converts galactose to glucose. Maltose, the sugar found in
malt, is made from two glucose atoms bonded together.
Glucose, fructose and galactose are monosaccharides
and are the only carbohydrates that can be absorbed into the
bloodstream through the intestinal lining. Lactose, sucrose
and maltose are disaccharides (they contain
two monosaccharides) and are easily converted to their
monosaccharide bases by enzymes in
the digestive tract. Monosaccharides and disaccharides are
called simple carbohydrates. They are also sugars --
they all taste sweet. They all digest quickly and enter the
bloodstream quickly. When you look at a "Nutrition Facts"
label on a food package and see "Sugars" under the
"Carbohydrates" section of the label, these simple sugars are
what the label is talking about.
There are also complex carbohydrates, commonly known
as "starches." A complex carbohydrate is made up of chains of
glucose molecules. Starches are
the way plants store energy -- plants produce glucose and
chain the glucose molecules together to form starch. Most
grains (wheat, corn, oats, rice) and things like potatoes and
plantains are high in starch. Your digestive system breaks a
complex carbohydrate (starch) back down into its component
glucose molecules so that the glucose can enter your
bloodstream. It takes a lot longer to break down a starch,
however. If you drink a can of soda full of sugar, glucose
will enter the bloodstream at a rate of something like 30
calories per minute. A complex carbohydrate is digested more
slowly, so glucose enters the bloodstream at a rate of only 2
calories per minute (reference).
You may have heard that eating complex
carbohydrates is a good thing, and that eating sugar is a bad
thing. You may even have felt this in your own body. The
following quote from The Yale Guide to Children's Nutrition
explains why:
If complex carbohydrates are broken down
to monosaccharides in the intestines before they are
absorbed into the bloodstream, why are they better than
refined sugar or other di- or mono-saccharides? To a great
extent it has to do with the processes of digestion and
absorption. Simple sugars require little digestion, and when
a child eats a sweet food, such as a candy bar or a can of
soda, the glucose level of the blood rises rapidly. In
response, the pancreas secretes a large amount of insulin to
keep blood glucose levels from rising too high. This large
insulin response in turn tends to make the blood sugar fall
to levels that are too low 3 to 5 hours after the candy bar
or can of soda has been consumed. This tendency of blood
glucose levels to fall may then lead to an adrenaline surge,
which in turn can cause nervousness and irritability... The
same roller-coaster ride of glucose and hormone levels is
not experienced after eating complex carbohydrates or after
eating a balanced meal because the digestion and absorption
processes are much slower.
If you think about it, this is incredibly interesting
because it shows that the foods you eat and the way you eat
them can affect your mood and your temperament. Foods do that
by affecting the levels of different hormones in your
bloodstream over time.
Another interesting thing about this quote is its mention
of insulin.
It turns out that insulin is incredibly important to the way
the body uses the glucose that foods provide. The functions of
insulin are:
- To enable glucose to be transported across cell
membranes
- To convert glucose into glycogen
for storage in the liver and muscles
- To help excess glucose be converted into fat
- To prevent protein breakdown for energy
According to the Encyclopedia Britannica:
Insulin is a simple protein in which two
polypeptide chains of amino acids are joined by disulfide
linkages. Insulin helps transfer glucose into cells so that
they can oxidize the glucose to produce energy for the body.
In adipose (fat) tissue, insulin facilitates the storage of
glucose and its conversion to fatty acids. Insulin also
slows the breakdown of fatty acids. In muscle it promotes
the uptake of amino acids for making proteins. In the liver
it helps convert glucose into glycogen (the storage
carbohydrate of animals) and it decreases gluconeogenesis
(the formation of glucose from noncarbohydrate sources). The
action of insulin is opposed by glucagon, another pancreatic
hormone, and by epinephrine.
What you can begin to
see from this description is that there are actually lots of
different things happening in your body around glucose.
Because glucose is the essential energy source for your
body, your body has many different mechanisms to ensure that
the right level of glucose is flowing in the bloodstream. For
example, your body stores glucose in your liver (as glycogen)
and can also convert protein to glucose if necessary.
Carbohydrates provide the energy that cells need to survive.
For more information on carbohydrates,
glucose and insulin, check out the links page
at the end of this article.
Proteins
A protein is any chain of amino
acids. An amino acid is a small molecule that acts as the
building block of any cell. Carbohydrates provide cells with
energy, while amino acids provide cells with the building
material they need to grow and maintain their structure. Your
body is about 20-percent protein by weight. It is about
60-percent water. Most of the rest of your body is composed of
minerals (for example, calcium in your bones). Amino acids are
called "amino acids" because they all contain an amino group
(NH2) and a carboxyl group
(COOH), which is acidic. Below you can see the chemical
structure of two of the amino acids.

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You can see that the top part of each is identical to the
other. That is true of all amino acids -- the little chain at
the bottom (the H or the CH3
in these two amino acids) is the only thing varying from one
amino acid to the next. In some amino acids, the variable part
can be quite large. The human body is constructed of 20
different amino acids (there are perhaps 100 different amino
acids available in nature).
As far as your body is concerned, there are two different
types of amino acids: essential and
non-essential. Non-essential amino acids are amino
acids that your body can create out of other chemicals found
in your body. Essential amino acids cannot be created, and
therefore the only way to get them is through food. Here are
the different amino acids:
Non-essential
- Alanine (synthesized from pyruvic acid)
- Arginine (synthesized from glutamic acid)
- Asparagine (synthesized from aspartic acid)
- Aspartic Acid (synthesized from oxaloacetic acid)
- Cysteine
- Glutamic Acid (synthesized from oxoglutaric acid)
- Glutamine (synthesized from glutamic acid)
- Glycine (synthesized from serine and threonine)
- Proline (synthesized from glutamic acid)
- Serine (synthesized from glucose)
- Tryosine (synthesized from phenylalanine)
Essential
- Histidine
- Isoleucine
- Leucine
- Lysine
- Methionine
- Phenylalanine
- Threonine
- Tryptophan
- Valine
Protein in our diets comes from both
animal and vegetable sources. Most animal sources (meat, milk,
eggs) provide what's called "complete protein," meaning
that they contain all of the essential amino acids. Vegetable
sources usually are low on or missing certain essential amino
acids. For example, rice is low in isoleucine and lysine.
However, different vegetable sources are deficient in
different amino acids, and by combining different foods you
can get all of the essential amino acids throughout the course
of the day. Some vegetable sources contain quite a bit of
protein -- things like nuts, beans, soybeans, etc. are all
high in protein. By combining them you can get complete
coverage of all essential amino acids.
The digestive system breaks all proteins down into their
amino acids so that they can enter the bloodstream. Cells then
use the amino acids as building blocks.
 Nutritional label from a can of tuna
fish
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From this discussion you can see that
your body cannot survive strictly on carbohydrates. You must
have protein. According to this article, the RDA (Recommended Daily Allowance) for protein
is 0.36 grams of protein per pound of body weight. So a
150-pound person needs 54 grams of protein per day. The photo
above is the Nutritional Facts label from a can of tuna. You
can see that a can of tuna contains about 32 grams of protein
(this can has 13 grams per serving and there are 2.5 servings
in the can). A glass of milk contains about 8 grams of
protein. A slice of bread might contain 2 or 3 grams of
protein. You can see that it is not that hard to meet the RDA
for protein with a normal diet.
Fats
We all know about the common fats that
different foods contain. Meat contains animal fat. Most breads
and pastries contain vegetable oils, shortening or lard. Deep
fried foods are cooked in heated oils. Fats are greasy and
slick.
 Nutritional label from a bottle of olive
oil
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You commonly hear about two kinds of
fats: saturated and unsaturated. Saturated fats are
normally solid at room temperature, while unsaturated fats are
liquid at room temperature. Vegetable oils are the best
examples of unsaturated fats, while lard and shortening (along
with the animal fat you see in raw meat) are saturated fats.
However, most fats contain a mixture. For example, above you
see the label from a bottle of olive oil. It contains both
saturated and unsaturated fats, but the saturated fats are
dissolved in the unsaturated fats. To separate them, you can
put olive oil in the refrigerator.
The saturated fats will solidify and the unsaturated fats will
remain liquid. You can see that the olive oil bottler even
chose to further distinguish the unsaturated fats between
polyunsaturated and monounsaturated. Unsaturated
fats are currently thought to be more healthy than saturated
fats, and monounsaturated fats (as found in olive oil and
peanut oil) are thought to be healthier than polyunsaturated
fats.
Fats that you eat enter the digestive
system and meet with an enzym
called lipase. Lipase breaks the fat into its parts:
glycerol and fatty acids. These components are then
reassembled into triglycerides for transport in the
bloodstream. Muscle cells and fat (adipose) cells absorb the
triglycerides either to store them or to burn them as fuel.
You need to eat fat for several reasons:
- As we will see in the next section, certain vitamins are
fat soluble. The only way to get these vitamins is to eat
fat.
- In the same way that there are essential amino acids,
there are essential fatty acids (for example, linoleic acid
is used to build cell membranes). You must obtain these
fatty acids from food you eat because your body has no way
to make them.
- Fat turns out to be a good source of energy. Fat
contains twice as many calories per gram as do carbohydrates
or proteins. Your body can burn fat as fuel when necessary.
Calories A
calorie is a measurement of energy. We tend to associate
calories with food, but any sort of energy can be
measured in calories. The official definition of a
calorie is the amount of energy needed to raise the
temperature of a gram of water by 1 degree C. A
kilocalorie is 1,000 calories. Just to make life
confusing, the "calorie" that you see on packages of
food is really a "kilocalorie" in the scientific sense.
It makes sense that food
contains energy, because most foods burn. For example,
if you have ever roasted marshmallows,
you probably know that marshmallows burn. What's burning
in that case is the sugar in the marshmallow. Fat burns
too -- you know that if you have ever seen a grease
fire. Your body "burns" fats, carbohydrates and proteins
-- not with flames, but with more controlled chemical
reactions that release the energy in different ways.
Fats, proteins and carbohydrates have characteristic
calorie measurements. One gram of fat contains almost 9
calories (kilocalories) of energy. One gram of any
carbohydrate contains 4 calories (kilocalories). One
gram of protein contains 4 calories (kilocalories) as
well. Knowing these values, you can calculate the number
of calories in any food as long as you know how many
grams of fat, protein and carbohydrates it contains. If
you were to take any food, dry it out and burn it, the
specified number of calories would be released by the
flames.
If you ingest 3,500 extra
calories one day (or over the course of several weeks or
months), your body will convert the excess energy to
body fat and save it for a rainy day. To lose 1 pound of
fat, therefore, you have to burn off the 3,500 excess
calories. You can do that either by exercising
or by restricting your calorie intake.
The USDA estimates that the
average man, 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighing 174
pounds, needs 2,900 calories per day (assuming light to
moderate activity). The average woman, 5 feet 4 inches
tall and weighing 138 pounds, needs 2,200 calories. See
this page to find out how to calculate your body's exact
calorie needs.
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For more information about fat in the
diet, check out the links page at the end of this article.
Vitamins
The Merriam-Webster Collegiate
Dictionary defines "vitamin" as:
vi.ta.min: any of various organic
substances that are essential in minute quantities to the
nutrition of most animals and some plants, act esp. as
coenzymes and precursors of coenzymes in the regulation of
metabolic processes but do not provide energy or serve as
building units, and are present in natural foodstuffs or
sometimes produced within the body.
Vitamins are
smallish molecules (Vitamin B12 is the largest, with a
molecular weight of 1,355) that your body needs to keep itself
running properly. In How Sunburns and Sun Tans Work, we learn that the body can
produce its own Vitamin D, but generally vitamins must be
provided in food. The human body needs 13 different vitamins:
- Vitamin A (fat soluble, retinol) comes from
beta-carotene in plants; when you eat beta-carotene, an
enzyme in the stomach turns it into Vitamin A.
- Vitamin B (water soluble, several specific
vitamins in the complex)
- Vitamin B1: Thiamine
- Vitamin B2: Riboflavin
- Vitamin B3: Niacin
- Vitamin B6: Pyridoxine
- Vitamin B12: Cyanocobalamin
- Folic Acid
- Vitamin C (water soluble, ascorbic acid)
- Vitamin D (fat soluble, calciferol)
- Vitamin E (fat soluble, tocopherol)
- Vitamin K (fat soluble, menaquinone)
- Pantothenic acid (water soluble)
- Biotin (water soluble)
In most cases, the
lack of a vitamin causes severe problems. The following list
shows diseases associated with the lack of different
vitamins:
- Lack of Vitamin A: Night blindness, xerophthalmia
- Lack of Vitamin B1: Beriberi
- Lack of Vitamin B2: Problems with lips, tongue, skin,
- Lack of Vitamin B3: Pellagra
- Lack of Vitamin B12: Pernicious anemia
- Lack of Vitamin C: Scurvy
- Lack of Vitamin D: Rickets
- Lack of Vitamin E: Malabsorption of fats, anemia
- Lack of Vitamin K: Poor blood clotting, internal
bleeding
A diet of fresh, natural food usually
provides all of the vitamins that you need. Processing tends
to destroy vitamins, so many processed foods are
"fortified" with man-made vitamins.
The Vitamin Dispenser gives you lots of useful information about
vitamins and their relation to different diseases.
Minerals
Minerals are elements that our
bodies must have in order to create specific molecules needed
in the body. Here are some of the more common minerals our
bodies need:
- Calcium - used by teeth, bones
- Chlorine
- Chromium
- Copper
- Fluorine - strengthens teeth
- Iodine - combines with tryosine to create the
hormone thyroxine
- Iron - transports oxygen in red blood cells
- Magnesium
- Manganese
- Molybdenum
- Phosphorus
- Potassium - important ion in nerve cells
- Selenium
- Sodium
- Zinc
We do need other minerals, but they
are supplied in the molecule that uses them. For example,
sulfur comes in via the amino acid methionine, and cobalt
comes in as part of vitamin B12.
Food provides these minerals. If they are lacking in the
diet, then various problems and diseases arise.
Water
As mentioned above, your body is about
60-percent water. A person at rest loses about 40
ounces of water per day.
Water leaves your body in the urine,
in your breath when you exhale, by evaporation through your
skin, etc. Obviously, if you are working and sweating
hard then you can lose much more water.
Because we are losing water all the time, we must replace
it. We need to take in at least 40 ounces a day in the form
of moist foods and liquids. In hot weather and when
exercising,
your body may need twice that amount. Many foods contain a
surprising amount of water, especially fruits. Pure
water and drinks provide the rest.
Fibers
Fiber is the broad name given to the
things we eat that our bodies cannot digest. The three
fibers we eat on a regular basis are:
- Cellulose
- Hemicellulose
- Pectin
Hemicellulose is found in the hulls of different
grains like wheat. Bran is hemicellulose. Cellulose is
the structural component of plants. It gives a vegetable its
familiar shape. Pectin is found most often in fruits,
and is soluble in water but non-digestible. Pectin is normally
called "water-soluble fiber" and forms a gel. When we eat
fiber, it simply passes straight through, untouched by the
digestive system.
Cellulose is a complex carbohydrate. It is a chain
of glucose molecules. Some animals and insects can digest
cellulose. Both cows and termites have no problem with it
because they have bacteria in their digestive systems
secreting enzymes that
break down cellulose into glucose. Human beings have neither
the enzymes nor these beneficial bacteria, so cellulose is
fiber for us.
I'm Starving...
A normal person who is
eating three meals a day and snacking between meals gets
almost all of his or her energy from the glucose that
carbohydrates provide. What happens if you stop eating,
however? For example, what if you are lost in the woods, or
you are purposefully fasting? What does your body do
for energy? Your body goes through several phases in its
attempt to keep you alive in the absence of food.
HungerSo how does your body know
that it is time to eat? Where does the sense of hunger
come from? It's not from a rumbling stomach -- people
who have their stomachs removed still feel hungry. It
appears that a small brain
structure called the hypothalamus is the center of
hunger. If one part of the hypothalamus is damaged, a
person will overeat tremendously. If another part is
damaged, a person never gets hungry. So clearly these
two parts balance one another to produce the sense of
hunger. It is still not understood how the hypothalamus
senses what the body's food needs are, but this article
discusses some of the research being done in
this area.
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The
first line of defense against starvation is the liver.
The liver stores glucose by converting it to glycogen. It
holds perhaps a 12-hour supply of glucose in its glycogen.
Once you finish digesting all of the carbohydrates that you
last ate, the liver starts converting its stored glycogen back
into glucose and releases it to maintain glucose in the blood.
Lipolysis also starts breaking down
fat in the fat cells and releasing fatty acids into the
bloodstream. Tissues that do not need to use glucose for
energy (for example, muscle cells) start burning the fatty acids. This reduces the
glucose demand so that nerve cells get the glucose.
Once the liver runs out of glycogen, the liver converts to
a process called gluconeogenesis. Gluconeogenesis
turns amino acids into glucose (see this article and this
article for more on gluconeogenesis).
The liver then begins producing ketone bodies from fatty acids being
made available in the blood by lipolysis. Brain and nerve
cells convert over from being pure consumers of glucose to
partial consumers of ketone bodies for energy (see this
article for information on ketone body metabolism).
Some of these alternative metabolic processes are
actually used on a regular basis. For example, Eskimos eating
a traditional Eskimo diet have virtually no carbohydrates on
the menu. You may have also read about several recent
weight-loss programs that try to take advantage of ketone
metabolism to "burn fat" (this article offers a thorough
description of the "ketogenic diet" as used in medicine, and
this article talks about the "fad diets" that utilize the
ketone effect). When you hear about these diets you will now
have a better idea of what they're about!